Isabella County:: 1859 - 2009
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About this ebook
Jack R. Westbrook
Jack R. Westbrook, Mt. Pleasant, Michigan author, was Managing Editor of the Michigan Oil & Gas News in that city 1973-2001. In 2005, Westbrook worked with Clarke Historical Library at the Mount Pleasant Michigan campus of Central Michigan University, cataloging more than 18,000 petroleum history photos, identifying many and creating a searchable photo database of more than 5,000 photos of industry people 1933-2005. For three years he was a monthly contributor to Michigan Traveler magazine before leaving that pursuit early in 2006 to pursue book projects. He now writes a regular photo history column for the Morning Sun, Mt. Pleasant’s daily newspaper.He has written and/or edited three books about Michigan’s oil and gas industry: and Michigan Oil and Gas, a photo history of the industry released by Arcadia Publishing in September, 2006.Westbrook also wrote Mount Pleasant Then and Now. He has written six more photo history books and one novel since. Westbrook wrote articles regarding the Michigan petroleum exploration and production industry in national trade and statewide general press publications. As a speaker on Michigan petroleum history, he has addressed every Michigan petroleum industry trade organization and numerous civic organizations in Michigan, as well as groups in Washington D.C. and Boston MA; including being the only non-attorney ever to keynote the Michigan Bar Association Oil and Gas Workshop in 1990. In the mid-1980s,Westbrook is a public speaker and has appeared at book signings and/or speeches 154 times since September, 2008
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Isabella County: - Jack R. Westbrook
projects.
INTRODUCTION
If you look at a map of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan you will see a right-hand mitten shaped peninsula. In the palm of that mitten is Isabella County, comprised of 16 townships, each six miles square with one-mile sections numbered 1 through 36 in a zigzag pattern beginning with the upper right corner and ending in the bottom right corner. On that canvas of flatland to gently rolling hills, people of multiple races and nationalities have come for centuries to make a new life in the land known since 1831 as Isabella County.
The area now known as Isabella County was home to abundant majestic pine and hardwood trees, one of the best such forests in the Great Lakes region. Known among the American Indians as Ojibiway Besse (the place of the Chippewa), part of the area of present-day Isabella County was their winter hunting grounds and may have been used by American Indians for more than 10,000 years. Europeans are comparatively recent arrivals. Fr. Jacques Marquette’s successor, Fr. Henry Nouvel, spent a winter here in 1675 with the Beaver Clan of the Chippewa Indians. Nearly two centuries later, Europeans returned to the middle of Michigan and the area known as Isabella County.
The most commonly accepted theory is that the county, when carved out of surrounding territory and named by legislative action in 1831, was named for Queen Isabella of Spain, patroness of Christopher Columbus.
In 1855, Isabella County’s first township, Coe, was established, and John Hursh settled in the area near what would become present-day Mount Pleasant. In 1859, Act No. 118 of the Michigan legislature officially established and organized Isabella County.
The story of Isabella County is not just a story of lumbering, then clearing the land, planting seeds, and growing things while pockets of population created villages, towns, and cities. Those things happened practically anywhere in the upper eastern portion of Midwest America. Isabella County’s unique story is of triumph. This slender volume can only give glimpses of the millions of stories of triumphs contained in Isabella County’s 576 square miles, 150 years, 89 named villages, and would-be settlements (with 30 additional otherwise known as
names). Some named post offices existed less than a year, established at a lumber camp and discontinued at that location when timber operations moved elsewhere. In my previous Arcadia Publishing books, Michigan Oil and Gas, Mount Pleasant in the Then & Now series, and Central Michigan University, I focused on some facets of Isabella County life. All those, with different pictures from previous Arcadia volumes, are touched upon herein.
A brief word about content: the Isabella County Sesquicentennial Committee has been of aid gathering photographs and plans to use this book as a fund-raiser. However, decisions on the contents of this book were made solely by me, based on photographs made available to me by formal reference venues and through the generosity of Isabella County residents who opened family albums to help make this book possible. Many pictures in this book are previously unpublished, thanks to all the foregoing. There was no attempt to favor or ignore any place, family, business, or aspect of Isabella County life. This pictorial footnote is designed only to encourage the reader to seek more details about the place we live. I am sure the list of left out
is going to exceed the I was glad to see
comments about this effort. An old saying goes, When you try to be all things to all people, you end up being nothing to anyone,
so I did not try to write the omnibus history. Instead I subscribed to Ricky Nelson’s thought expressed in an old song lyric, If you can’t please everybody, then you’ve got to please yourself,
and I have with this, the latest of my middle Michigan photographic histories.
One
NORTHWESTERN ISABELLA COUNTY
The northwestern quadrant of Isabella County consists of four relatively flat and sparsely populated townships slightly more wooded than townships to the east in the county. This quadrant is not traversed by any major highway. Some light industry dots the landscape, but primarily the area is inhabited by part-time farmers and those who commute to nearby Mount Pleasant and other more populous places for employment. Three of the county’s four major water recreation lakes lie in the northwestern group of Isabella County townships: Coldwater Lake (pages 26 and 27), Lake Isabella, and Littlefield Lake.
Townships and settlements in northwest Isabella County include Coldwater Township, the northwesternmost Isabella County township, which was established on March 3, 1868, on the petition of a group of 36 people to organize a village named Coldwater, after the lake in the area. The village of Coldwater never came to be, possibly because another Coldwater, Michigan, community already existed in southwestern Michigan, but the Coldwater Township name remained.
Coldwater Township had only two named towns that started but no longer exist. They are Brinton (see pages 21–25) and Nero, a post office with no known surrounding businesses that existed from 1871 until 1877 in section 24, apparently to accommodate a nearby lumber camp.
Gilmore Township, in the northern tier of the county’s townships at the northeast corner of the northwest county quadrant, was organized in 1870 and named Gilmore in honor of Civil War general Quincy A. Gilmore by Rufus Glass, the first township supervisor. The only town, now defunct, ever formed in Gilmore Township was named Gilmore, settled in the 1860s, and given a post office in 1891 that operated until 1906. Littlefield Lake, a primarily residential lake, lies in Gilmore Township.
Nottawa Township, established in 1875, was originally called Nottaway, after a Chippewa Indian chief who had taken up residence in the area. The first Nottawa Township supervisor was 1870s pioneer Michael McGreehan, and the next supervisor was former Michigan senator Alonozo T. Frisbee. Nottawa Township is home to Coldwater Lake County Park, the oldest park in the county, and to the Coldwater Lake 4-H Camp.
Nottawa Township settlements include the present-day Beal City (see pages 12–20). In 1911, Isaac A. Fancher said of the village, "It is in the center of one of the very best of farming communities. It is settled largely with Germans, a thrifty, prosperous and intelligent class. This